The noise inside Mike Tice's suburban Seattle home can be deafening these days.

The former Bears offensive coordinator isn't bothered by the commotion. He knew what was in store when he huddled with his wife, Diane, and decided to use their newfound free time to remodel.

"You might hear a bunch of screaming and drilling in a minute,'' Tice cautioned during a recent phone interview. "In fact, my contractor is banging on the door right now. I've got to go make some decisions. These are the only decisions I make now ... how far tile is going to go.''

Unfortunately for Tice, he wasn't a part of the Bears' rebuilding project.

After coach Lovie Smith was fired on New Year's Eve, Tice and the rest of the assistant coaches were left in limbo. New coach Marc Trestman retained two of them — Jon Hoke (defensive backs) and Mike Phair (defensive line) — while four others quickly landed other NFL jobs.

Tice, meanwhile, is one of four offensive coaches from Smith's staff who remain out of work. He was relieved of his duties Jan. 17 with one year on his contract, and the Bears owe him about $1 million.

"Everyone says: 'But you get paid. You've got a contract,' " Tice said. "For me, the thrill of going in and trying to create something and the thrill of trying to get better is what it's all about.''

Tice approached every practice with the mind-set of moving forward, even if statistics showed his offense took a step back. A recent report alleged Tice and quarterback Jay Cutler were so much at odds last season that backup quarterback Josh McCown had to act as a liaison. A sideline incident in Dallas, where Cutler angrily walked away after Tice sat down and tried to explain something to him, would seem to back such a claim.

But Tice said that incident was the only true rift he had with Cutler.

"In regard to the comments that are out there about there being an intermediary between Jay Cutler and (me) because of a lack of communication, there wasn't a week that went by last year where Jay and I did not communicate,'' Tice said. "I never felt at all that there was ever a point in the season that Jay didn't support what I was trying to do.''

Tice would rather put his Bears stint in the past and look ahead to the next opportunity. He spoke with Chiefs coach Andy Reid about becoming the team's offensive line coach. Tice spent two seasons coaching the Bears line before being elevated to coordinator.

"I thought I had a shot at that job,'' Tice said. "During the course of the interview, I recommended a guy I worked with, Andy Heck. And Andy got the job instead.''

Tice figured he had a chance with the Cowboys when offensive line coach Bill Callahan was promoted to offensive coordinator. A position never materialized — Callahan will oversee the line while assuming play-calling duties — so Tice had to conjure up a different strategy.

"We said we were going to move out to Seattle and kind of regroup and join the YMCA and try to get back in shape,'' Tice said. "I wanted to spend some quality time with Diane and see how a normal person gets up in the morning and plans things without having to go through all those hours.''

An open schedule allowed Tice to revisit one of his other loves: horse racing. He attended the Kentucky Derby and even walked his friend Mike Pegram's horse Fiftyshadesofhay to the winner's circle after the Black-Eyed Susan Stakes in Baltimore.

"That was fun, but other than that, I'm usually just shoveling black rock in my driveway,'' Tice said. "I'm just a normal guy trying to stay busy.''

Time away from football has allowed Tice to reflect on what he could have done better as a coach. He connected with his linemen with a hard-line approach and charmed the media with his comedic monologues.

Yet critics will point to his struggles as a first-time coordinator. The Bears finished 28th out of 32 teams in total offense, 29th in passing offense and 22nd in third-down efficiency.

"Anytime you fail at something, you always want to take a look at why you failed,'' Tice said. "I always try to correct Mike Tice before I try to correct somebody else. I learned a lot of lessons from it. I don't really want to go into them.

"I would sum it up like this: Sometimes in life, we find ourselves trying to get along and trying to please as opposed to being who we really are.''

Tice realizes the Bears' offensive identity strongly contributed to Smith's firing. He knows Smith had his back even through the most trying times.

"I loved working for Lovie Smith,'' Tice said. "(He) is a man of honor. (He) never blamed anyone for failure. He always took it head on and put himself first as the guy who had to get better. And I admired that about him. Not every single guy is willing to take the bullet.''

Tice still wants to take a shot at coaching, although his outlook toward the profession has changed. The former Vikings head coach reflected on how he helped a "baby'' grow in former Bears guard Lance Louis, now with the Dolphins.

"I would love to be an offensive line coach moving forward,'' Tice said. "My aspirations of being a head coach are not going to drive me. What's going to drive me is working with a group of guys and developing an offensive line. That is where my energy, my enthusiasm is.

"With that said, I'm out of work. If someone said, 'Hey, you want to coach tight ends?' I'm a good tight ends coach too, you know?''